U.S. House Speaker Pelosi wraps up long and historic leadership career
NANCY Pelosi is wrapping up a long career of congressional leadership in which she became the only woman to serve in the powerful post of U.S. House of Representatives speaker, showed an ability to pass major legislation, united fractious fellow Democrats and challenged some of the world’s most powerful men.
Pelosi, an 82-year-old liberal from California, on Thursday announced she would give up her House leadership role but remain in the House, representing San Francisco as she has done since 1987.
Pelosi’s move followed her party’s loss of control of the House to Republicans in last week’s midterm elections. Pelosi proved to be not only a durable leader but an effective legislator in two stints as speaker even as she was vilified by Republicans including former President Donald Trump.
She presided over the House as it twice impeached Trump - although he was acquitted by the Senate both times - and warned of the imminent threat she said the businessman-turned-politician posed to American democracy. In 2020, Pelosi publicly ripped up a copy of Trump’s final State of the Union address as she sat behind him in the House chamber.
She played a major role in advancing the policy agendas of Democratic Presidents
Barack Obama and Joe Biden and at times blocking those of Republicans George W. Bush and Trump.
Pelosi was the highestranking and most-powerful elected woman in U.S. history until Kamala Harris became vice president in January 2021. She embraced the historic nature of her speakership.
“For our daughters and our granddaughters today, we have broken the marble ceiling. For our daughters and our granddaughters, now the sky is the limit,” Pelosi said after first becoming speaker in 2007.
Her successes led to years of villainization by conservatives, including when Trump supporters trying to overturn his 2020 election defeat stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, roaring “We want Nancy” and looting her office.
In video taken during the Capitol riot and shown by CNN, Pelosi can be heard saying of Trump, “I hope he comes . ... I’m going to punch him out and I’m going to go to jail, but I’m going to be happy.”
A politically motivated assailant echoed the “Where’s Nancy?” chant as he entered her San Francisco home on Oct. 28 and used a hammer to attack her 82-year-old husband Paul, who is expected to fully recover from a skull fracture.
Pelosi has been a prominent figure in the U.S. capital over a tenure spanning seven presidential administrations. She first served as House speaker from 2007 to 2011, then regained the job in 2019 after her party took back control of the chamber in the 2018 midterm elections.
Many Republican candidates heading into the midterm elections ran ads attacking her and linking other Democrats to her. Her decision to step aside paved the way for a potential new generation of Democratic House leadership.
As speaker, Pelosi helped pass the 2010 Affordable Care Act, a law dubbed Obamacare that enabled millions of previously uninsured Americans to obtain medical coverage. It is considered Obama’s signature legislative achievement. She led the House during Biden’s presidency to pass COVID-19 pandemic-related relief legislation, an infrastructure overhaul, the first federal gun legislation in decades and major climate legislation.
Pelosi also made her mark in foreign policy, visiting destinations including Ukraine, Iraq and Afghanistan. In August, she enraged China by becoming the highestranking American official in 25 years to visit Taiwan, saying she was honoring America’s “unwavering commitment” to the self-ruled island’s “vibrant democracy.” The visit capped decades of Pelosi’s high-profile opposition to China’s authoritarian rulers including President Xi Jinping.
Reuters)